I dreamed last night that I was in the woods, walking by myself. It was dusk, or dawn, Iâm not quite sure, but there was someone else there with me. I couldnât see them, I just knew they were there, gaining on me. I didnât want to be seen, I wanted to run away, but I couldnât, my limbs were too heavy, and when I tried to cry out I made no sound at all.
When I wake, white light slips through the slats on the blind. The rain is finally gone, its work done. The room is warm; it smells terrible, rank and sourâIâve barely left it since Thursday. Outside, I can hear the vacuum purr and whine. Cathy is cleaning. Sheâll be going out later; when she does I can venture out. Iâm not sure what I will do, I canât seem to right myself. One more day of drinking, perhaps, and then Iâll get myself straight tomorrow.
My phone buzzes briefly, telling me its battery is dying. I pick it up to plug it into the charger and I notice that I have two missed calls from last night. I dial into voice mail. I have one message.
âRachel, hi. Itâs Mum. Listen, Iâm coming down to London tomorrow. Saturday. Iâve got a spot of shopping to do. Could we meet up for a coffee or something? Darling, itâs not a good time for you to come and stay now. Thereâs . . . well, Iâve got a new friend, and you know how it is in the early stages.â She titters. âAnyway, Iâm very happy to give you a loan to tide you over for a couple of weeks. Weâll talk about it tomorrow. OK, darling. Bye.â
Iâm going to have to be straight with her, tell her exactly how bad things are. That is not a conversation I want to have stone-cold sober. I haul myself out of bed: I can go down to the shops now and just have a couple of glasses before I go out. Take the edge off. I look at my phone again, check the missed calls. Only one is from my motherâthe other is from Scott. A message left at quarter to one in the morning. I sit there, with the phone in my hand, debating whether to call him back. Not now, too early. Perhaps later? After one glass, though, not two.
I plug the phone in to charge, pull the blind up and open the window, then go to the bathroom and run a cold shower. I scrub my skin and wash my hair and try to quieten the voice in my head that tells me itâs an odd thing to do, less than forty-eight hours after your wifeâs body has been discovered, to ring another woman in the middle of the night.
The earth is still drying out, but the sun is almost breaking through thick white cloud. I bought myself one of those little bottles of wineâjust one. I shouldnât, but lunch with my mother would test the willpower of a lifelong teetotaller. Still, sheâs promised to transfer £300 into my bank account, so it wasnât a complete waste of time.
I didnât admit how bad things were. I didnât tell her Iâve been out of work for months, or that I was fired (she thinks her money is tiding me over until my unemployment check arrives). I didnât tell her how bad things had got on the drinking front, and she didnât notice. Cathy did. When I saw her on my way out this morning, she gave me a look and said, âOh for Godâs sake. Already?â I have no idea how she does that, but she always knows. Even if Iâve only had half a glass, she takes one look at me and she knows.
âI can tell from your eyes,â she says, but when I check myself in the mirror I look exactly the same. Her patience is running out, her sympathy, too. I have to stop. Only not today. I canât today. Itâs too hard today.
I should have been prepared for it, should have expected it, but somehow I didnât. I got onto the train and she was everywhere, her face beaming from every newspaper: beautiful, blond, happy Megan, looking right into the camera, right at me.
Someone has left behind their copy of the , so I read their report. The formal identification came last night, the postmortem is today. A police spokesman is quoted saying that âMrs. Hipwellâs cause of death may be difficult to establish because her body has been outside for some time, and has been submerged in water for several days, at least.â Itâs horrible to think about, with her picture right in front of me. What she looked like then, what she looks like now.
Thereâs a brief mention of Kamal, his arrest and release, and a statement from Detective Inspector Gaskill, saying that they are âpursuing a number of leads,â which I imagine means they are clueless. I close the newspaper and put it on the floor at my feet. I canât bear to look at her any longer. I donât want to read those hopeless, empty words.
I lean my head against the window. Soon weâll pass number twenty-three. I glance over, just for a moment, but weâre too far away on this side of the track to really see anything. I keep thinking about the day I saw Kamal, about the way he kissed her, about how angry I was and how I wanted to confront her. What would have happened if I had done? What would have happened if Iâd gone round then, banged on the door and asked her what the hell she thought she was up to? Would she still be out there, on her terrace?
I close my eyes. At Northcote, someone gets on and sits down in the seat next to me. I donât open my eyes to look, but it strikes me as odd, because the train is half empty. The hairs are standing up on the back of my neck. I can smell aftershave under cigarette smoke and I know that Iâve smelled that scent before.
âHello.â
I look round and recognize the man with the red hair, the one from the station, from Saturday. Heâs smiling at me, offering his hand to shake. Iâm so surprised that I take it. His palm feels hard and calloused.
âYou remember me?â
âYes,â I say, shaking my head as Iâm saying it. âYes, a few weeks ago, at the station.â
Heâs nodding and smiling. âI was a bit wasted,â he says, then laughs. âThink you were, too, werenât you, love?â
Heâs younger than Iâd realized, maybe late twenties. He has a nice face, not good-looking, just nice. Open, a wide smile. His accentâs Cockney, or Estuary, something like that. Heâs looking at me as though he knows something about me, as though heâs teasing me, as though we have an in joke. We donât. I look away from him. I ought to say something, ask him, âYou doing OK?â he asks.
âYes, Iâm fine.â Iâm looking out of the window again, but I can feel his eyes on me and I have the oddest urge to turn towards him, to smell the smoke on his clothes and his breath. I like the smell of cigarette smoke. Tom smoked when we first met. I used to have the odd one with him, when we were out drinking or after sex. Itâs erotic to me, that smell; it reminds me of being happy. I graze my teeth over my lower lip, wondering for a moment what he would do if I turned to face him and kissed his mouth. I feel his body move. Heâs leaning forward, bending down, he picks up the newspaper at my feet.
âAwful, innit? Poor girl. Itâs weird, âcos we were there that night. It was that night, wasnât it? That she went missing?â
Itâs like heâs read my mind, and it stuns me. I whip round to look at him. I want to see the expression in his eyes. âIâm sorry?â
âThat night when I met you on the train. That was the night that girl went missing, the one they just found. And theyâre saying the last time anyone saw her was outside the station. I keep thinking, you know, that I mightâve seen her. Donât remember, though. I was wasted.â He shrugs. âYou donât remember anything, do you?â
Itâs strange, the way I feel when he says this. I canât remember ever feeling like this before. I canât reply because my mind has gone somewhere else entirely, and itâs not the words heâs saying, itâs the aftershave. Under the smoke, that scentâfresh, lemony, aromaticâevokes a memory of sitting on the train next to him, just like I am now, only weâre going the other way and someone is laughing really loudly. Heâs got his hand on my arm, heâs asking if I want to go for a drink, but suddenly something is wrong. I feel frightened, confused. Someone is trying to hit me. I can see the fist coming and I duck down, my hands up to protect my head. Iâm not on the train any longer, Iâm in the street. I can hear laughter again, or shouting. Iâm on the steps, Iâm on the pavement, itâs so confusing, my heart is racing. I donât want to be anywhere near this man. I want to get away from him.
I scramble to my feet, saying âExcuse meâ loudly so the other people in the carriage will hear, but thereâs hardly anyone in here and no one looks around. The man looks up at me, surprised, and moves his legs to one side to let me past.
âSorry, love,â he says. âDidnât mean to upset you.â
I walk away from him as fast as I can, but the train jolts and sways and I almost lose my balance. I grab on to a seat back to stop myself from falling. People are staring at me. I hurry through to the next carriage and all the way through to the one after that; I just keep going until I get to the end of the train. I feel breathless and afraid. I canât explain it, I canât remember what happened, but I can feel it, the fear and confusion. I sit down, facing in the direction I have just come from so that Iâll be able to see him if he comes after me.
Pressing my palms into my eye sockets, I concentrate. Iâm trying to get it back, to see what I just saw. I curse myself for drinking. If only my head was straight . . . but there it is. Itâs dark, and thereâs a man walking away from me. A woman walking away from me? A woman, wearing a blue dress. Itâs Anna.
Blood is throbbing in my head, my heart pounding. I donât know whether what Iâm seeing, feeling, is real or not, imagination or memory. I squeeze my eyes tightly shut and try to feel it again, to see it again, but itâs gone.